Sustainability and Politics: Explaining the Emergence of the 2020 Budapest Climate Assembly
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Citizens’ Assemblies on Climate Change
Why Citizens’ Assemblies?
3. Research Design
4. An Overview of the Budapest Climate Assembly
4.1. Selection Process and Participants
4.2. The Organizers, Process and Topics
4.3. The Drivers for Budapest Climate Assembly
4.4. Civil Society and Political Institutions
“I think there was a limitation in their funding … the limitation was that it needed to be around climate issues, but it was kind of flexible. So, there was a time when we were discussing talking about traffic in Budapest and other related topics, but then we decided to go for a more generic question, which climate emergency and the question what Budapest should do about it”.(Interview 3)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. The List of Interviews Used in the Analysis (in Chronological Order)
Interview Code | Position | Age | Date and Duration of the Interview |
Interview 1 | Deputy Mayor | 53 | 15 June 2020, 38 min |
Interview 2 | Mayor | 45 | 30 June 2020, 24 min |
Interview 3 | Advisor to the Mayor of Budapest on Citizen Participation | 29 | 28 July 2020, 29 min |
Interview 4 | DemNet, Main Organizer | 32 | 3 August, 2020, 28 min |
Interview 5 | DemNet, Facilitator | 38 | 7 September 2020, 25 min |
Interview 6 | Counsellor at the City’s Department of Climate and Environment | 40 | 30 October 2020, 42 min |
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Topic | Promoters | Reasons |
---|---|---|
Electoral reform | Leaders of political parties | Election pledges Greater visibility and electoral support |
Experts and activists | Election pledges | |
Permanent citizens’ assembly | German speaking minority | Building a territory’s political identity |
Controversial policies: same-sex marriage, abortion, climate change | Academics | Ideological match |
Politicians | Election pledges | |
Citizens | National identity | |
Climate change | Government | Election pledges Economic interest Sustainability |
Topic | Meeting and Discussion | Output |
---|---|---|
Climate change Energy use of households | 1.5 h | 1 recommendation |
1.5 h | 1 recommendation | |
Transport and climate change Health and climate change | 1.5 h | 1 recommendation |
1.5 h | - | |
Sustainable rainwater management Green surfaces Social adaptation | 1.5 h | 1 recommendation |
1.5 h | 2 recommendations | |
1.5 h | 2 recommendations | |
Visions about the future of Budapest | 2 h | - |
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Oross, D.; Mátyás, E.; Gherghina, S. Sustainability and Politics: Explaining the Emergence of the 2020 Budapest Climate Assembly. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116100
Oross D, Mátyás E, Gherghina S. Sustainability and Politics: Explaining the Emergence of the 2020 Budapest Climate Assembly. Sustainability. 2021; 13(11):6100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116100
Chicago/Turabian StyleOross, Daniel, Eszter Mátyás, and Sergiu Gherghina. 2021. "Sustainability and Politics: Explaining the Emergence of the 2020 Budapest Climate Assembly" Sustainability 13, no. 11: 6100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116100
APA StyleOross, D., Mátyás, E., & Gherghina, S. (2021). Sustainability and Politics: Explaining the Emergence of the 2020 Budapest Climate Assembly. Sustainability, 13(11), 6100. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116100